Alex Pigot
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alexpigot.bsky.social
Alex Pigot
@alexpigot.bsky.social

Biodiversity scientist trying to understand where biodiversity comes from and where it’s going. Views my own

Environmental science 70%
Geography 18%
Do montane birds evolve more efficient wing shapes for flying at high elevations? Our global analysis published today suggests that they do! 🧵(1/8)⬇️ www.cell.com/current-biol....

Looks interesting 🧐

‘Metabolic trade-offs can reverse the resource-diversity relationship’

www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1...
Metabolic trade-offs can reverse the resource-diversity relationship
bioRxiv - the preprint server for biology, operated by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, a research and educational institution
www.biorxiv.org

Evolutionary history of host trees amplifies the dilution effect of biodiversity on forest pests

journals.plos.org/plosbiology/...

Variation in Avian Predation Pressure as a Driver for the Diversification of Periodical Cicada Broods

www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/...
The lack of evidence for declining local diversity through time must be because everything is homogenizing, leading to larger-scale losses.

Right?!

Nope, says our analysis of 500+ meta-communities through time just published in Science Advances

🧪🌎🐟🌳🦋 🐦🦌

www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
Synthesis reveals approximately balanced biotic differentiation and homogenization
Homogenization is most common at large temporal and spatial scales but is balanced by differentiation at smaller scales.
www.science.org

Reposted by Alex L. Pigot

If you missed @ymalhi.bsky.social talk last Friday on what an energetic view of life on Earth can tell us about nature decline and recovery, you can watch it here now: youtu.be/t35HLM6BZI0
Exciting update! @copernicusecmwf.bsky.social - launch the Interactive Climate Atlas

atlas.climate.copernicus.eu/atlas
This new tool builds on the data of the IPCC Climate Atlas and enables exploration of CMIP6 climate projections and other datasets including observations and reanalysis.

Reposted by Alex L. Pigot

Between 10% and 47% of Amazonian forests may be exposed to climate stresses that could push the biome past a tipping point as soon as 2050, according to a paper in Nature. go.nature.com/4bG7nWC 🧪

Reposted by Alex L. Pigot

Prob the best studied climate-related range expansion of any European #birds is the Cetti’s Warbler. This skulking brown bird is the sole European representative of a largely Asian genus & is a resident species of reedbeds & wet scrub. 1/N 🌿🌏 🧪

Pics Nick Goodram CC BY 2.0 flickr.com/search/?user...